When 16 and Pregnant debuted on MTV in the summer of 2009, I had no desire to watch it (I had assumed, wrongly, that it was some kind of Pro-Life propaganda show). When the follow up series, Teen Mom, premiered last winter, I was more intrigued, but figured it was too late to jump on board. I only agreed to watch Season 2 of Teen Mom because my husband was so passionate about it. He even rewatched the Season 2 premiere with me, pausing the DVR every few minutes to fill me in on each mother’s backstory. Yes, he’s a good husband.

After just one episode I was hooked. In fact, more so that any other reality TV show, the cast of Teen Mom has wormed its way into my everyday existence. When, for example, I am cajoling my 4-year-old into eating dinner while hand feeding the 8-month-old and also intermittently washing the dinner dishes so that I can get them both into the bathtub before the 8-month-old has a meltdown and Can’t-you-please-just-finish-your-dinner-now-Maisy!, I stop and think “If this scenario is driving me, a 34-year-old woman, crazy, how must it be for a 17-year-old girl?” Or, when I read about one of the Teen Moms in US Weekly (they’ve been all over the covers of the tabs the last few weeks), I find myself excitedly relating the news to my husband, as if I’m telling him about a close friend: “Did you hear? Farrah’s dating Pauly D from Jersey Shore!” or “I’m so disappointed that Amber and Gary are still together. They really need to break up.”

My unnatural attachment to these young women is based on two divergent affects. On the one hand, I identify with the Teen Moms. Watching these girls encounter the various pitfalls inherent in being a first time parent reminds me of the first year of my daughter’s life, and how incredibly challenging and rewarding it was. For example, in one episode, Farrah takes her daughter, Sophia, to the car wash and realizes that she has forgotten to bring diapers. But she can’t drive back home, or to a store, because her car is being detailed. “I’m such a bad mother!” Farrah wails. With Sophia in dire need of a diaper change, Farrah fashions a makeshift diaper out of towels (for the record, if the entire event had not been recorded by MTV’s cameras, there is NO WAY that the owner of the car wash would have consented to giving Farrah his towels to use as diapers. Blech).

Now those of you without children may agree with Farrah’s self assessment — that she is a bad mother for dressing her daughter’s precious bum in car wash towels. But, let me assure you: every new mother will make the mistake of going somewhere and forgetting to bring the diaper bag. It will likely happen just once because the consequences of that mistake will remain seared in your brain for eternity. I found myself in a similar situation when my first child was only a few months old. I’ll spare you the details but it involved an unexpected traffic jam, a screamy, screamy baby, and me gripping the driver’s wheel repeating the mantra “I will never leave the house without the diaper bag again.”

This is not the typical life of an American teenager.

While part of Teen Mom‘s allure is this bittersweet reminder of my own struggles to raise a young child (as well as the Schadenfreude that comes from watching truly bad parenting in action), I am also drawn to the show because I view the Teen Moms as theirparents as well. The mother in me wants to pull each girl aside and give her a reassuring hug. I think back to when I was 16 — how I slept until noon on the weekends, got drunk at parties, obsessed about my appearance and social standing, and generally thought of nothing but myself. In other words, I was doing precisely what a 16-year-old should do. So when I watch single parent Farrah working overtime at a pizza joint, then returning home to take care of her daughter, and then study, I feel an incredible sadness for her. Now I know Farrah loves her daughter and one day, both of their lives will be easier. But at this age Farrah should be going to Homecoming dances and gossiping about boys and staying out past curfew and spending long stretches of her free time listening to music and writing tortured poetry while locked in her bedroom. But she can’t because she’s a mom. And mothers of young children don’t get to be selfish or spontaneous. Or at least not as often as they need to.

I should hate this relationship but I don't.

This is why the inclusion of Catelynn and Tyler, the only couple of the group who decided to put their baby up for adoption, is such an interesting counterpoint to the other stories on Teen Mom. Given Catelynn’s wildly unstable home life — her mother is verbally abusive and her step father (who is also her fiance’s father, natch) is in and out of prison and rehab — her decision to give Carly up for adoption was both wise and mature. We therefore expect to see Catelynn and Tyler having a wonderful time in comparison with the harried mothers featured on the show. Instead, the adoption remains an open wound for the young couple.

A beautiful touching moment. In reality TV. Go figure.

While Catelynn dealt with her guilt immediately after Carly’s birth, this season has focused on Tyler’s attempts to come to terms with what it means to be a father and yet be childless at the same time. The episode in which Tyler calls another, older, adoptive father for support and advice was one of the most moving scenes in reality TV history (yes, really). When his mentor tells him the act of adoption was a loving and selfless act, Tyler replies (with tears starting to trickle down his cheeks) “That’s something that I struggle with a lot. Admitting that, you know, she deserves better than me. I mean, when you’re the man, the father, you are the provider. And to admit…that I can’t give her that, that’s the hardest thing.” How many 17-year-old boys are this self-aware, this in touch with their own complex emotions? I bawled through this scene. Thus, it is oddly the couple who chose not to raise their child that speaks most poignantly to the high emotional costs of an unplanned pregnancy. You can bet that I will make both of my children watch Season 1 and Season 2 of Teen Mom when they start dating.

Random thoughts and questions:

1. Is anyone watching Catelynn’s little brother? Did you see him making out with the refrigerator the other week? Dear Lord, can he go live with Carly’s adoptive parents too?

BREAK UP NOW.

2. I am totally exasperated by Amber and Gary’s horribly dysfunctional relationship. Mark my words: after spending a childhood watching her father pack and unpack his bags, leave and return, over and over, Leah will have a warped vision of how a loving relationship is supposed to work. How about we send her to Carly’s adoptive parents too?

3. While the parents of all of the other Teen Moms seem to be in a secret competition for “World’s Biggest Douchebag,” Maci’s parents prove time and again that they are exceptional parents. I’m thinking in particular about the episode in which Maci considers moving in with a group of girlfriends, and bringing Bentley along. I love how her parents didn’t immediately say “Are you insane?” but rather gently pointed out how difficult it would be for a group of college girls to live with a toddler. Thankfully, Maci agreed.

This mullet can only be the product of meth.

4. Butch says his drug of choice is cocaine. Bullshit. That man is on meth.

Cigarette smoke is the 5th food group in Catelynn's house.

5. Does Catelynn’s mother realize that the big metal machines following her around are video cameras? And that these video cameras are recording her atrocious behavior and then broadcasting it to millions of people across the world? Or she is just on meth?

6. Tyler’s monogrammed “Baltierra” baseball cap. Where can I get one of those?

In light of the many US Weekly cover stories about the show’s cast, blogs and online news sites have been debating whether or not Teen Mom glorifies teen pregnancy. Others point to how people like Maci and Farrah seem to be doing okay and how that sends the wrong message about the “reality” of teen pregnancy. I agree that Teen Mom is not realistic, primarily because it’s cast is all white (with the exception of Farrah whose father is Hispanic, I believe?). I do wish MTV had included more women of color to better reflect the reality of teenage pregnancy in America. However, it is difficult to argue that Teen Momglorifiesteen pregnancy when you watch Maci miss out on the fun of college life, or Amber fail her G.E.D. practice test because she simply cannot remember what she learned in high school, or Farrah getting swindled out of $3,000 because she is far too young to be handling her own finances, or Catelynn cry because her mother can’t forgive her for giving her baby up for adoption. Yes, these girls love their children, but they are girls who have been forced to become women way too soon.

Amanda’s Brother: The show is absolutely exploitation, as all reality TV is. But it is hardly “poverty porn.” Do you watch TEEN MOM? If so, I think you’d agree with me that it sends a powerful message about the perils of unprotected sex. It’s way more effective than a sex ed. class or a PSA.

Perils of unprotected sex? No. Are they showing teenagers who contracted herpes or HIV? No. Are they showing young mothers and couples with babies while getting by on welfar or near minimum wage? No. They’re showing kids who have spoons shoved up their ass. These kids make hundreds of thousands of dollars every year. Don’t believe me? Look it up. Amber Portwood made 200, 000 last year from the show so as a single mother who has to fend for myself and is actually a good mom, it makes me a little bitter when these kids give their kids away or lose custody of them and get paid big bucks for it.
MTV crews are more than welcome to come film me a few hours a day and I’ll show people what being a real struggling parent is like.

I think little Nick is a big reason why Carly has a better life. Both Caitlynn and Tyler have watched that poor little boy grow up seeing screaming matches, drunken rants, and a crying sister–all through a thick cloud of cigarette smoke. Living in a series of shabby apartments where meth is the only hot thing fresh from the oven. Carly has that boy to thank! I also got teary when Tyler admitted, “It’s hard knowing she deserved better than me.” Amber and Gary are 15 years away from being April & Butch. I hope they see that!
Caitlynn and Tyler were on the Today’s show yesterday and Matt Lauer referred to them as “stars”–just saying. . .

Not sure if you’ve seen the original 16 & Pregnant, but there were two other couples: a biracial couple (who doubled as military brats) and Whitney & Weston, a sweet, albeit naive, couple who had a little boy with special needs. On the Dr. Drew finale aftershow, he asked Whitney how they were dealing with baby Weston’s condition ( a genetic lung disorder that will kill him by 40, unless he has a lung transplant). She responded that it made her “sad” because the baby “wouldn’t be like other boys–couldn’t smoke, drink, or play sports”–activities which could apparently kill him. Later Dr. Drew got Weston to admit that he smoked around the baby–also deadly with his condition. To me, they modeled the difference between the teenage brain and the adult one. Teenagers aren’t supposed to worry about bad lungs–they’re supposed to have fun! I wonder if MTV thought their story too much a buzzkill to air. . .

I take pretty serious issue with a flippant comment that this is poverty porn. I recently wrote elsewhere that Teen Mom is one of the few shows on TV that actually shows poor and working class families engaging in poor and working class family activities: going to the roller rink, all those trips to Wal-Mart, and Amber and Gary’s vacation to Florida in which they drove and stayed with family. It’s all exploitation, but I’m from the same small town as A&G and their life is very close to many people’s I knew (past tense: what can I say? I got out). Why can’t lower class people find accurate representations of themselves on TV? What’s wrong with showing how clothes pile up without dressers to put them in? What’s wrong with showing the obscenely damaging fights people have, lower class or not? Why can’t that prompt useful discussions about how class equality in the U.S. continues to be an enormous issue?

I started watching 16 and Pregnant b/c I heard my hometown would be featured but I got hooked because Farrah’s mom is so much like my own; because I’d have grown up to be Amber without some hardcore therapy; because I’m childfree by choice and so amazed that this show exists without one mention of abortion. The only thing I can’t watch are the wrap-up specials with Dr. Drew forcing his wack opinion on the youth about what they should be expecting from their lives and relationships. I wasn’t terribly drawn to the second season of 16 and Pregnant b/c I feel less engaged with the characters (in part b/c I felt the girls had such difficulty verbally expressing themselves) but I will continue to watch every incarnation of the show until the reruns cease. I love it.